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The Military

Air Cannon Ties Pirates In Knots 770

Hugh Pickens writes "Numerous high-tech devices have been proposed to help ships cope with piracy on the high seas. Now a company has developed a ship-borne launching device that fires a net or coiled rope into the path of pirate vessels using compressed air with a range of up to a range of 400m. The payload net or rope, which has a parachute attached to the end, will unravel and lay out across the surface of the water so that as the pirate boat travels through the water its propeller shaft will pick up the line and become entangled. 'With the trials and testing we've done, it has taken us some 45 minutes to cut and disentangle the line from the propeller itself,' says Jonathan Delf. 'Within that time of course, the target ship is on its way and hopefully help has arrived in the form of naval forces or helicopter support.' The system can be fired up to five times off just a cylinder of air like a simple scuba tank." The video mentions that the device can also fire a payload of golf balls. The systems have recently been sold to "several large shipping companies that travel near the oil-rich Nigerian Delta, which, like the Somalian coast, is rife with piracy."
Space

Submission + - NZ rocket launches into space (tvnz.co.nz)

An anonymous reader writes: New Zealand has now launched it's first rocket into space. The five-metre long rocket, with a maximum diameter of 150 millimetres, is expected to travel to an altitude of 120 kilometres — 20km on from where space starts — then return to Earth in a sub-orbital ballistic arc, to be recovered from the sea. A successful launch was made at 3pm Monday 30 November from Great Mercury Island. Check out the launch video at http://tvnz.co.nz/technology-news/second-time-lucky-nz-rocket-launch-3207087/video
Image

Scientists Say a Dirty Child Is a Healthy Child Screenshot-sm 331

Researchers from the School of Medicine at the University of California have shown that the more germs a child is exposed to, the better their immune system in later life. Their study found that keeping a child's skin too clean impaired the skin's ability to heal itself. From the article: "'These germs are actually good for us,' said Professor Richard Gallo, who led the research. Common bacterial species, known as staphylococci, which can cause inflammation when under the skin, are 'good bacteria' when on the surface, where they can reduce inflammation."

Comment Re:Windows sucks (Score 1) 1231

I did a fresh install of 9.10 last night on an fairly old desktop with an SiS 315 integrated graphics card. I couldn't get the display to go above 800*600. I tried to edit the xorg.conf file, but it didn't exist. I tried creating it, restarting X and it still wouldn't go beyond 800*600. I'm pretty sure this has little to do with 9.10 and more to do with SiS drivers, but it was weird that I spent ages on this last night only to find a slashdot story about it this morning.
Space

Making Babies In Space May Not Be Easy 262

Hugh Pickens writes "Studies of reproduction in space have previously been carried out with sea urchins, fish, amphibians and birds, but Brandon Keim writes in Wired that Japanese biologists have discovered that although mammalian fertilization may take place normally in space, as mouse embryos develop in microgravity their cells have trouble dividing and maturing. The researchers artificially fertilized mouse eggs with sperm that had been stored inside a three-dimensional clinostat, a machine that mimics weightlessness by rotating objects in such a way that the effects of gravity are spread in every direction. Some embryos were ultimately implanted in female mice and survived to a healthy birth, but at lower numbers than a regular-gravity control group. Part of the difference could be the result of performing tricky procedures on sensitive cells, but the researchers suspect they also reflect the effect of a low-gravity environment on cellular processes that evolved for Earth-specific physics. '"These results suggest for the first time that fertilization can occur normally under G environment in a mammal, but normal preimplantation embryo development might require 1G," concludes the report. "Sustaining life beyond Earth either on space stations or on other planets will require a clear understanding of how the space environment affects key phases of mammalian reproduction."'"
Robotics

Pogo-Style Robot Legs Allow 9-Foot Bounces 42

destinyland writes "A new pogo stick jumps nine feet using legs developed for running robots. (It replaces the stick's spring with a fiber-reinforced 'bow' that was developed at Carnegie Mellon's Robotics institute.) One scientist even suggests robots could use its 'BowGo' technology in the low-gravity environment of the moon. 'Hopping many meters above ground level, the robot would have an excellent view of the terrain.'"

Comment Personal-circuit TV (PCTV) (Score 1) 404

I'm not sure how off topic this is but I have often thought about embedding a small video camera in my glasses and recording everything I see. Not only would it be a cool project, it could be a very useful memory aid. If my friends wore them too and chose to share visual memories with me then I could walk down an unfamiliar street and see what they saw when they were there.
Now, if only we could convince 'the criminals' to do the same...

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